The economics references committee is due to scrutinise the collapse of Dixon Advisory, examining how this failure has influenced the development and ongoing viability of the Compensation Scheme of Last Resort (CSLR).
The motion for the inquiry, moved in the Senate on Tuesday by Pauline Hanson’s One Nation, was approved with an amendment – that the inquiry be handled by the parliamentary joint committee on corporations and financial services instead of the originally proposed economics references committee.
The Senate then recommitted the vote on the government amendment, ultimately deciding that the economics references committee would oversee the inquiry.
Scheduled to take place and report by the last sitting day in March 2025, the inquiry will address several issues recently highlighted by the advice community.
According to the motion, the following will be considered:
- The underlying cause of the collapse of wealth management companies such as Dixon Advisory.
- How the actions of directors of wealth management companies and related entities, senior management and the individual advisers contribute to the collapse of these companies.
- The role of the financial services regulatory regime in the context of how matters involving the collapse of an investment product promoted by a vertically integrated business are assessed and how fault is attributed.
- Evaluation of the placement of wealth management companies into administration and the related insolvency issues, including with respect to the appropriateness of actions by directors and senior management and the transfer of advisers and clients to a related party entity for no consideration.
- Assessment of the period for which wealth management companies can remain a member of the Australian Financial Complaints Authority.
- The role of Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC), including providing consumer information to investors affected by corporate collapse and consideration of the most appropriate arrangements for future cases of insolvency.
- ASIC’s role investigating corporate collapse and the appropriateness of any regulatory intervention that may reduce scale of loss for consumers.
- Options for enforcement action, including litigation, that ASIC has available to it in relation to wealth management companies following collapse.
- The implications of the collapse of wealth management companies on the establishment of the CSLR, including with respect to design considerations and the potential implications for future matters.
- And any other related matters.
More to come.




So…. all they’ve done is decided to hold “an inquiry”.
To quote Treasury from a few years ago….”if jobs are lost in the Financial Advice Sector they’ll be adsorbed in other areas”
They don’t care about Advisers and this softly softly approach hasn’t gotten Advisers anywhere.
Great job FAAA in getting this Public Inquiry up and going so that a spotlight is put on what happened at Dixon Advisory and how they have blown up the CSLR. It is too easy for politicians to look the other way and conclude that ‘there is nothing to see here’. It takes perseverance to achieve these outcomes and diligent working of key relationships. Well done FAAA. It is great to know that we have a professional association that can make things happen in Canberra. Now let’s make sure that this inquiry delivers meaningful change to the design of the CSLR.
Funny how the politicians that the media hates the most are also the ones asking the tough questions
Wow! Paulene has done something useful, good on her.
Long overdue let’s hope they get to the bottom of this despicable corporate behavior…
Maybe they could skip the enquiry, which will serve ZERO benefit, like every enquiry before it since the dawn of time, and instead just allocate the money they will spend on this enquiry to the CSLR bill instead, it would likely leave us with a levy of just $1 each.
It wasn’t me
Thank you Pauline Hanson and Thank you to our Senate. Looking forward to making submissions to the inquiry.
Excellent news
“I can’t remember”.